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#Anthony Byrne
scenesandscreens · 7 months
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Peaky Blinders, Season Six (2023)
Directed by Anthony Byrne
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desertpups · 11 months
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The Francesca video is here! Collaborating with Anthony Byrne for a third time has been a gift. We made #SomeoneNew, #DinnerAndDiatribes and now #Francesca together.
This new video is one I have a particular soft spot for, I really hope you enjoy it! 🖤
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Director Anthony Byrne and director of photography Mathieu Plainfossé, discussing their work on the sixth and final series of Peaky Blinders.
They discuss 2 key scenes:
Min 15:37 - Opening scene in Miquelon (S6EP1)
Min 28:15 - Tommy/Lizzie Midland hotel scene (S6EP5)
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tv-moments · 4 months
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Special Ops: Lioness
Season 1, “The Choice of Failure”
Director: Anthony Byrne
DoP: Eric Koretz
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nofckingfighting · 2 years
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weeo · 2 years
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📷 source: peaky blinders official instagram
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cieuxgris · 2 years
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Peaky Blinders (2022): Lock and Key
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ilovefinncole · 2 years
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The Set Up:
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The Shot:
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denimbex1986 · 2 years
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‘...Throughout the stylish BBC gangster drama...Tommy Shelby (Cillian Murphy) is in a league of his own. Although he’s the second-born brother, the ambitious Tommy quickly takes his place as head of the family upon returning home to Birmingham, in central England, after fighting in World War I.
The show’s creator, Steven Knight, has said that he sees the show as a western, and Tommy is the outlaw at its center...Tommy, as the story’s defining figure, is the character most fans seek to emulate. (In 2020, he was voted the “greatest TV character of all time” by the male-oriented British website LADbible.)
...From the beginning of “Peaky Blinders,” when the show’s characters were still emerging from the shadow of World War I, masculinity and violence have been inextricably linked. The gang succeeded by using physical force as well as cunning, not to mention those razor blades they supposedly sewed into their caps. “The only way to guarantee peace is to make the prospect of war seem hopeless,” Tommy argues in Season 3.
When “Peaky Blinders” premiered in 2013 in Britain, it joined a TV landscape littered with male antiheroes: “Breaking Bad” and the transformation of Walter White ended the same month that “Peaky” debuted; “Sons of Anarchy” — with the violent biker Jax Teller at its center — aired its penultimate season that year; and viewers were six seasons into Don Draper’s journey up the corporate ladder in “Mad Men.”
Tommy fits in well among these other dangerously and seductively flawed leading men. Through his character, though, the show has also explored the impact of battlefield trauma, prefiguring the more explicitly mental health-conscious TV that we see today.
In Britain, “Peaky Blinders” has received a steady stream of criticism for its stylish depiction of violence, and last year Nick Fletcher, a member of Parliament, said Tommy, specifically, was a negative role model. “Is there any wonder we’re seeing so many young men committing crime?” Fletcher said. “These programs make crime look cool.”
Watching a show like “Peaky Blinders” is not enough, on its own, to lead to violent behavior, according to the psychologist Douglas Gentile, whose work focuses on the impact of mass media. But “the whole time you’re watching a violent show, you’re rehearsing aggressive fantasies,” he said in a recent video interview, and the more you watch, “the more desensitized you become to both media and real world violence.”
...The emergence of the #MeToo movement popularized the concept of “toxic masculinity,” which broadly refers to a model of manhood that encourages men to “suppress emotion and mask distress” and can lead to aggression, according to the American Psychological Association.
“Peaky Blinders” has undergone an evolution of its own, focusing less on physical fights and more on the internal battle within Tommy, said Anthony Byrne, who directed Seasons 5 and 6.
“Violence is very overused,” he said in a recent phone interview. “Season 4 was all about gangsterism. I felt like the show had gotten away from what it should continue to be: the journey of Tommy’s psyche.”
In the final season, for example, Byrne cut a “classic Peaky Blinders” fight scene featuring Tommy, Arthur and some dockworkers. “It just didn’t work and it felt wrong,” he said. “Time had moved on. Tommy had moved on.”
From the beginning, Tommy has struggled with what we now understand as post-traumatic stress disorder, stemming from his time in World War I. In Season 6, he suffers from seizures, with his body reflecting the inner turmoil wrought from fighting at home and abroad.
This vulnerability is essential reason viewers root for the character, according to Julie Taddeo, a historian who focuses on British television. “He can be a very unlikable character,” she said in a recent phone interview, “but he’s relatable because we now have a more nuanced understanding of war and trauma.”
Despite the show’s focus on the Peaky Blinders and their conflict, female characters like Ada Shelby and Aunt Polly are central to Tommy’s trajectory. “I always explored his masculinity through his feminine self,” Byrne said.
“Everything in Tommy’s psyche is governed by the women in his life, both dead and alive.” he explained. “His mother, who committed suicide by throwing herself into a canal, is kind of a spectre who is very much the subtext of Tommy.”
We bid farewell to Tommy at a time in which ideas around masculinity are becoming more expansive, and public figures in Britain like the rapper Stormzy and Prince Harry have shared their own mental health struggles.
As a result, “our expectations and demands of male characters have definitely expanded and intensified,” Taddeo said. “We now want a lot more from these men.”
...Throughout “Peaky Blinders,” the question of redemption hangs over Tommy. In the final season, Tommy says he’s learning kindness from his children, and in the closing scenes of the show, he chooses not to shoot a man who has wronged him. Instead, he walks away.
“Tommy rides in on a black horse and out on a white horse, so there’s hope for him,” Byrne said. “Where he goes, nobody knows, but there will be a feature film, so the story will continue.”’
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Peaky Blinders, Otto Bathurst, Tom Harper, Colm McCarthy, Tim Mielants, David Caffrey, Anthony Byrne, 2013-2022
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fabioemme78 · 2 years
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mrrrdaisy · 2 years
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New Music: Anthony Byrne - Exhale
New Music: Anthony Byrne – Exhale
Anthony Byrne went in more personal with his freshly released song titled “Exhale”, “Exhale” is a release that is noted for taking great care in presenting a composition that keeps our attention at all times thanks to an accurate technique of musical performance in which all the components of this theme make sense individually and form a great artistic consciousness together, making it appear as…
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tv-moments · 5 months
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Special Ops: Lioness
Season 1, “Bruise Like a Fist”
Director: Anthony Byrne
DoP: Eric Koretz
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kdoxkeic · 12 days
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Long overdue… Irish women/men have a chokehold on me
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goodsniff · 2 years
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Heartbreak High // Spider & Ant // 🕷️
Of course my favourite is the Bastard Daddy Long Legs
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cieuxgris · 2 years
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Peaky Blinders (2022): Black Day
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